I coach a bunch of little leaguers some of the time in my busy schedule. I do it because I love the game and my son asked me to. How do you say no to that? You don’t, you go all in.
In one of the early practices, I
mentioned Jorge Posada and his heart when he played the game. Only a few of the kids really knew what
Jorge was all about or even who he was. Some were young
when Jorge played and others just say him once or twice but mostly heard from their dad. Explaining heart isn’t easy, especially if
it’s not part of your makeup. For some of these kids, they enjoy playing but they're not there yet when it comes to "heart." Trust me though, that will change.
I was able to isolate Jorge’s double
in the 2003 ALCS against the Red Sox.
It’s probably my favorite hit by Jorge ever and I knew that if I showed
that to them on my iPad, they’d get it. There he was standing on second base,
screaming and shaking his fists.
Heart...there it was.
My players are kids. I never want to
push anyone too hard at the age of 9 or 10, but at the same time, I want them to feel what winning is
all about. After all, we already lost a few too, so winning consistently is
something I’d like them to experience right now. That demonstrates "team." That demonstrates "unity" and when they start
playing together, they start pushing each other. But it’s that model that lets heart eek in
and I’m starting to see it in my boys.
You know about my 10 year old and
how I have always equated him to Jorge Posada.
Read MY SON HAS THAT POSADA FIRE for context on that. He watches everything on the field. If he strikes out, he'll think about it on the bench. He's into the game and now these
other kids are watching every pitch too. They’re making the plays and when it comes
together, they know they did something great… even if that "something" is as
simple as firing a ball to first to get the 3rd out of the
inning. Every little play is big in
little league, because while the fundamentals need to happen, it’s the plays
that don’t happen that can get you into trouble quick. Luckily for me, I’m finding little Jorge
Posada’s on my club… "Little Warriors" willing to do what they need to do to
win. They swing hard now, they are aggressive on the bases and they get filthy
with their slides to home. It’s that
Posada Instinct all coming true. Heart.
Jorge Posada probably never imagined
that he did anything out of the ordinary when he played the game, but he’d be
wrong to think that. I always followed Jorge’s career since the beginning. Why? Because people said he couldn’t, but he
said he could and did. That was always
my trouble. I was small, I was never picked on the playground until the end and
no one expected much out of me.
But over time, I gained that confidence and
while it was Rickey Henderson Instinct for me in the early 80’s, the message is
the same. You know you can, you do and
you win.
Thanks to Jorge Posada, there are a
lot of kids that know they can these days on our little league baseball
field. What a role model… what an
icon. All about hustle… guts… hard… and Posada instinct. We should all have #20 on our backs these days. It would make
it even sweeter for these kids who have turned into little ballplayers right in
front of my eyes.
I needed to share... these kids need some applause. They've worked hard... like Jorge did for us.
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